Belfast Telegraph

I’m no hero, UK diver insists as he flies home from Thai cave rescue mission

- BY ROD MINCHIN AND FLORA THOMPSON

ONE of the divers who helped to save 12 schoolboys and their football coach from a flooded cave in Thailand played down his heroics as he returned to Britain.

Rick Stanton denied he was a hero, saying he was using a “very unique skill set” to “give something back to the community”.

He and several other British and one Irish diver had joined the rescue mission after the football team became trapped in an undergroun­d network in Chiang Rai province following monsoon rains.

The retired fireman from Coventry and his colleague John Volanthen from Bristol were the first divers to reach the stranded group in Luang Nang Non Cave.

They then launched a mission to rescue the boys and their 25-year-old coach, which concluded on Tuesday after an 18-day ordeal. The operation claimed the life of Thai navy diver Saman Kunan, who died while replenishi­ng oxygen canisters.

The rescue was particular­ly treacherou­s because the boys, aged 11 to 16, had to swim through tight spaces despite having no diving experience.

Speaking on his return to the UK yesterday, Mr Stanton said: “Are we heroes? No, we were just using a very unique skill set which we normally use for our own interests and sometimes we are able to use that and give something back to the community. This was completely uncharted, unpreceden­ted territory and nothing like this has been done. So, of course there were doubts.

“I knew that we had a good team, with good support from the Thai authoritie­s, the caving community and rescue organisati­ons, so we had the best we could do to make a plan work.”

Mr Stanton described his relief as he and Mr Volanthen found the boys were still alive, nine days after they went missing deep within the labyrinth: “Initially, of course, excitement, relief that they were still alive. As they were coming down the slope, we were counting them until we got to 13... unbelievab­le. We gave them a little bit of extra light, they still had light, they looked in good health.

“Then, of course, when we departed, all we could think about was how we were going to get them out.

So there was relief tempered with uncertaint­y.”

He would not describe how his team rescued the kids, saying it was “too detailed for this point in time”.

He added: “The most important thing to have was a full face mask which had been applied inside with positive pressure to enable them to breathe and to be relaxed enough so not to feel any anxiety during the process. There was a lot of chaos but we were so task-orientated, focused, and we blanked that out and carried on with the job in hand, step by step, until we achieved success.”

During a Press conference at Heathrow Airport, Mr Stanton declined to answer any medical questions but said: “They were carefully handled.” Fellow divers Chris Jewell and Connor Roe, both from Somerset; Josh Bratchley from Devon; Jim Warny from Co Clare; Mike Clayton from Yorkshire, and Gary Mitchell from Wales also returned to the UK yesterday.

Mr Jewell said: “Our role was to help transport the boys under water through the cave.”

 ??  ?? Rick Stanton and (inset) fellow diver Chris Jewell arrive home at Heathrow Airport yesterday
Rick Stanton and (inset) fellow diver Chris Jewell arrive home at Heathrow Airport yesterday

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